Saturday, January 25, 2003

…I have been concerned that this program could be used to invade the privacy of Americans by snooping around in our bank accounts, personal Internet computers, phone records…


News: Senator slams Pentagon data-mining
Sen. Chuck Grassley of Iowa said he will support legislation to curb the scope of the controversial Total Information Awareness (TIA) project and limit the FBI's involvement with it. The full Senate could vote on the proposal as early as Thursday as an amendment to a spending bill.

Grassley, who is a frequent critic of government abuses of power, did not go as far as some Democratic senators and call for a broad moratorium on TIA, which is funded by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). Instead, his proposal says TIA may not be used for "domestic intelligence or law enforcement purposes."

"Like many people, I have been concerned that this program could be used to invade the privacy of Americans by snooping around in our bank accounts, personal Internet computers, phone records and the like," Grassley said in a statement. If fully implemented, TIA would link databases from sources such as credit card companies, medical insurers and motor vehicle departments for police use toward snaring terrorists.

Support from Grassley, a senior Republican who is chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, substantially increases the chances that Congress will place at least some limits on the development and use of the TIA system.

In a letter to Attorney General John Ashcroft on Tuesday, Grassley charged that the Justice Department and FBI are closer to using TIA than the agencies previously have acknowledged. That came after a letter to Grassley from Defense Department Inspector General Joseph Schmitz, who said the FBI is considering "possible experimentation with TIA technology in the future."

As previously reported, efforts in Congress to block the TIA program began last week with a Democratic proposal championed by Sen. Russ Feingold of Wisconsin. It's a standalone bill called the Data-Mining Moratorium Act that would create a moratorium on TIA.

A third proposal is backed by Democratic senators including Ron Wyden of Oregon, Dianne Feinstein of California, and Patrick Leahy of Vermont. The Wyden-drafted amendment to the omnibus appropriations bill being debated this week goes further than Grassley's proposal, and bans TIA after two months unless Congress receives a detailed report, or President Bush certifies that halting TIA would "endanger the national security of the United States."


http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105-981753.html

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